Yes I get mustUnderstand=true instead of mustUnderstand=1
Valerie
Wing Yew Poon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
09/10/2007 21:40
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Pour : user@xmlbeans.apache.org
cc :
Objet : RE: Problem with boolean type
Valerie,
what exactly is the incorrect behavior
I recently had a similar problem. A schema defines an element thusly:
xsd:element name=DayWorking type=xsd:boolean minOccurs=0/
When calling the generated interface:
d.setDayWorking(true);
XMLBeans then writes:
DayWorkingtrue/DayWorking
However, the application reading the XML instance
It is not a bug, as Dennis said in a previous email, XMLBeans and binding tools
in general, try to do the right thing in many cases, but this is not one of
them. Even if this Boolean restriction seems simple enough, to support all
restrictions is impossible.
Check out the following example
This one is not a bug. true and 1 are both valid values for the schema
type. When XMLBeans writes the xml, it uses the canonical lexical
representation, which is true.
From: Albert Bupp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 10, 2007 8:46 AM
To:
Please see what Cezar wrote on this thread.
I guess to do what you want (without changing your schema), you can use the
generated xsetter instead of the setter.
So -
for
xsd:element name=DayWorking type=xsd:boolean minOccurs=0/
you can set it by
XmlBoolean xb =
I agree that it's not a bug, however, it would be
helpful if there were a way to direct the setter
as to the form to output the value in, as either
true or 1, since both are legitimate boolean representations.
At 03:04 PM 10/10/2007, you wrote:
This one is not a bug. true and 1 are both
would restricting it via an enumeration work for you Albert?
-Jacobd
On 10/10/07, Wing Yew Poon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This one is not a bug. true and 1 are both valid values for the
schema type. When XMLBeans writes the xml, it uses the canonical lexical
representation, which is true.
I see. Thanks for the incite into the library. I
hadn't realized that the I could invoke xsetfoobar on a given setter.
At 03:22 PM 10/10/2007, you wrote:
Please see what Cezar wrote on this thread.
I guess to do what you want (without changing
your schema), you can use the generated xsetter
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